We have almost forgotten about that frustrating letdown on Silva’s performance during UFC 90 last year but the first 3 minutes of the main event of UFC 97 at the Bell Center in Canada just gave us an idea of how horribly boring and irritating things are going to be. It was all dancing and tentative strikes all the way till the end. Anderson Silva vs. Thales Leites was horribly frustrating we felt we waz wobbed.

Leites was like someone in heat that at the slightest chance, he flops on his back to the ground, legs raised to expose his bottom. It would have been okay if Silva would oblige, but no. He just stands there, hands akimbo, feasting his eyes on Leites’ exposed derriere. A lot of instances, Silva would bend over gingerly trying to touch his opponent’s splayed legs. It was such a bizarre sight.

And we thought it was the only time we’ll see Anderson Silva in a “ bizarro world” with that dismal performance against Cote in UFC 90 last October.

Now comes UFC 97…what? “Redemption”? Nothing was redeemed here. Silva just sank deeper into his “bizzaro world.” We felt robbed.

When someone whose reputation is being peddled as one of the world’s best MMA fighters; one who is not only a martial artist but maybe the finest artist inside the octagon; one with eight consecutive wins (the highest record in the history of MMA); one who is hitting accuracy rate is touted at an astounding 80% while the rest of MMA gladiators only have an average 35% hitting accuracy, you would always expect nothing less than an explosive display of skill and power. But no, we waz wobbed.

A couple of months back, we remember him through a translator saying, “What’s important to me is to step into the octagon and give the public and the world a good performance.” What good performance was he talking about?

After the fight, when asked by Joe Rogan how he felt about the crowd’s boos, he said, “unless you’re here inside the octagon, you wouldn’t know what’s happening,” or something to that effect. He also said, sometimes even though you want a good fight, things just don’t go your way – or something to that effect. But Silva, YOU are one of the world’s finest fighters. You are supposed to have a lot of techniques in your mojo to force an attack against Leites.

We understand you want to keep a standup fight but when Leites have repeatedly flopped his back to invite you on the mat repeatedly, and it was obvious that he would not do it with you otherwise than by rubbing body parts on the ground, you should have obliged. You trained specifically for this in Rio, right?

But you didn’t. We, the spectators who paid a total of $ 4.9 million on tickets, and the several other millions of fans around the world who watched this game on TV felt we waz wobbed.

Anderson Silva now has the impressive top record of 9 consecutive undefeated matches. This does not mean anything to the fans. Mixed martial arts is a spectator sports. The fans wouldn’t mind if a fighter wins or losses as much as they would mind a lousy performance. They watch to see a fight. Mixed martial arts is about the fight, the skills, the action, the drama. Who wins or losses is just the anti-climax of the event.

Unlike fellow WWE alumnus Brock Lesnar who skyrocketed to MMA stardom via UFC, Bobby Lashley wants to take the slower route.

When asked if he would be invited, would he want to fight for the UFC, the former WWE champ said no. What?!! Ain’t that a bit lame? Lashley said he needs to stay on the undercards or on smaller gigs before he considers moving up on the UFC. Oh, he respects UFC so much that he calls it the “pinnacle of the sport” that he won’t even consider being with the UFC now. We’d say it’s still lame.

We’d say that’s a major issue on the self-confidence department. Lashley tries to justify it by saying, “When I get to the UFC, I want to be a serious contender for the title.” Major confidence issue, indeed.

Last we’ve heard, the guy would rather be on the reality TV. With this letdown on the guy’s aggressiveness on going up, when “reality TV” was mentioned, we thought he meant “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” or “Supernanny.” Pardon the slip, he meant “The Ultimate Fighter.”

He’d house up with other MMA no-namers in a house outside of Las Vegas, show the world how he bitches up, er, we mean show the world how he trains and take down other wannabes. Yeah right, reality TV… as a means of moving up to UFC. That’s cool. We just can’t help feeling let down his “no” to the rhetorical question of “if offered a slot on the UFC.”

But then…

The guy starts to make sense when he said, “I don’t want to just be another guy going into the UFC because it’s a grand stage and build there. I don’t think that’s what I need to do.” Oh, yeah. The octagon could be a very unforgiving stage. To say the obvious, a premature exposure could break you more than it could build you.

Oh, yeah. We remember how that other WWE guy, Lesnar, was not spared from belittling remarks when he first set foot inside the octagon, “He’s a freakin’ wrestler!” We remember how Jason Guida “screwed with his head” during a pre-fight presser.

We remember how we wrote last week how “it is easier to work yourself upwards when everyone’s looking somewhere else, than having pot shots thrown at you while you fight your way up.”

So, okay. Good luck on your play safe mode, Lashley. We find it a bit lame. But then, you’ve got some wisdom there.

The days seem to roll slowly. Barely three weeks on the countdown and we’ll see how Anderson Silva’s trip to the Carnival paradise Rio de Janeiro turns out during the April 18 UFC 97 “Redemption” at the Bell Center in Montreal. Besides perhaps learning a couple of samba steps or looking for that Girl from Ipanema, or lounging at the Copacabana, “The Spider” actually hied off to Rio for an octane-fed top-level jiu-jitsu training with BJJ legends Ronaldo “Jacare” Souza and Andre Galvao.

Galvao studied and tries to imitate Leites’ fight style and uses this during Silva’s fight trainings.

While Silva (23-4-0) is known for his primary skills of Muay Thai and Brazilial Jiu-jitsu, his top-level jiu-jitsu training in Brazil speaks a lot about what he thinks about his BJJ skilled opponent in Thales Leites (14-1-0). “Thales is a new kids who’s just starting out, but he’s already proven that he deserves this opportunity,” Silva declared. “He’s a dangerous opponent, just like all the others I’ve faced. He has this opportunity to fight for the title because he impressed the promoters enough to get this chance.”

The 27-year-old Leites (14-1) has never been finished in 15 career fights and has enjoyed a relatively stealth rise up the middleweight ladder.

Other fighters that makes us want to time-travel to April 18 are Cheick Kongo (13-4-1) who will clash against Dutch kickboxing hero Antoni Hardonk. Former World Extreme Cagefighting light heavyweight champion Steve Cantwell (7-1) also highlights this card with a showdown with world-ranked Luis Arthur Cane.

Here are more reasons for the excitement:

Chuck Liddel vs. Mauricio “Shogun” Rua

Brian Stann vs. Krzysztof Soszynski
Cheick Kongo vs. Antoni Hardonk
Luis Arthur Cane vs. Steve Cantwell
Denis Kang vs. Xavier Foupa-Pokam
Jason MacDonald vs. Nate Quarry
Ed Herman vs. David Loiseau
Eliot Marshall vs. Mike Ciesnolevicz
Mark Bocek vs. David Bielkheden
T.J. Grant vs. Ryo Chonan
Sam Stout vs. Matt Wiman

On a side note, we just can’t help but wonder how the so-called previously unrecognized regulations of Regie des Alcools, des courses et des jeux (RACJ), the government agency that oversees combat sports in Quebec, would affect the over-all outcome of the fights. This so-called previously unrecognized regulations for the sport is the prohibition of elbow and knee strikes. The RACJ regulations, which were actually intended for “mixed boxing” in the 1990’s also asked referees to intervene whenever a fighter is knocked down. We hope this will not result to a watered-down scuffle at the octagon.

More reason for us to shiver in anticipation.

By:  Joe B. Skotzou
lashley
It is easy to get intrigued by Bobby Lashley. Three months into mixed martial arts and off he goes getting compared to one of the sports’ biggest crowd-drawers, Brock Lesnar. In a sense, simply because he comes from where Lesnar was, he gets to be talked about more compared to other newbies. Now, that’s what we call lucky.

Popularity could be a pain in the a*^@#.

When a newbie comes and gets to be talked about a lot, the general direction would mostly be for some MMA fans to try to put him down. “He’s a wrestler. He comes from that fake sport of fake actors.” Remember how Brock Lesnar was met with wryness? In a sense, one is guilty of being a loser until he proves it otherwise. In a sense, this disparagement makes it more difficult for a newbie to move around. It is easier to work yourself upwards when everyone’s looking somewhere else, than having pot shots thrown at you while you fight your way up.

MMA is still show business.

Whoever gets more attention –more media mileage, is one step ahead of the rest of the flock. Now, it is up to him to show the denizens within and outside the octagon that there is something worth talking about. And he has to show his mettle fast, lest his “promising newbie” status becomes just another flash in the pan. And the 6-foot one former EWC champion seems to be doing well at this.

First match passed with flying colors.

His debut exposure at the cage (MFA: There Will Be Blood) was explosive with that less-than-a-minute knock-out win over Joshua Franklin. Massively muscled like a raging bull, he charged like a lithe pit bull to pick up Franklin and slam him to the ground. Who said wrestlers are supposed to be slow? "I learned how to move with a faster pace of training when I was small, and I was able to keep going at that pace as I got bigger and kept growing,” Lashley said.

Second match was not without its share of excitement.

Lashley, without trying to, seems to have brought with him professional wrestling’s flair for drama. The pre-fight trash-talk he got from Jason Guida was a good example of how you stir interest to a match. And nothing is more media-frenzy friendly than two protagonists on the verge of slugging it out during a press-con.

"He played a lot of head games before the fight," Lashley said, referring to the trash-talk thrown on him by Guida. Lashley admitted that Guida “screwed with his head” when the latter said, "You've been faking this for how long? Tell'em, let'em know. How long's it been since you trained hard? How long has it been since you squared up against someone who's going to hit you on the chin and not pull a punch?"

Fortunately, he was able to keep his game for this fight. The former wrestling champion is now 2-0 to help appease the usual naysayers who oppose professional wrestlers dipping their toes in the now more popular world of mixed martial arts.

Indeed, Bobby Lashley is a promising add to the world of mixed martial arts. Let us not forget the new faces (and fat pockets) he brings to MMA: he’s got a large following that he brought with him from the (fake) world of wrestling. Remember, this is show business too.

MMA, like any other spectator sport, is all about putting them arses on chairs.

By Joe B. Skotzou

gsp
Welterweight champion Georges St. Pierre comes in as one the three best pound-for-pound fighter in polls, next only to heavyweight champion Fedor Emelianenko and middleweight champion Anderson Silva. B.J. Penn, on the other hand is a great lightweight who entered the octagon a lot lighter at 20 lbs, and smaller than the formidable St. Pierre, who is comfortable at 187 against Penn’s forced 168 pounds.

The “Prodigy,” who has been eyeing the much lucrative welterweight (more bigger-named fighters and bigger purses) has been neglecting his advantage in the lightweight division. The devastation he suffered from St. Pierre must have brought him back to his senses: get back to where he is king – the lightweight division.

While it can be said that B.J. Penn worked harder and trained himself like he never did before anywhere during his entire career, it was not enough to realize his dream of being the first dual-titled mixed martial arts warrior.

St. Pierre came more mentally prepared with his game plan. The first round was to tire him down, and the game was stopped by ref Herb Dean, the ringside physician and by Penn’s corner at the end of the fourth round. The devastation was so…devastating that Penn has to be rushed to the hospital later.

A slight controversy threatened to mar St. Pierre’s win when one of his cornermen rubbed Vaseline to his body (which fight officials corrected by having the slippery substance towelled off St. Pierre’s body). While it was obvious that the Vaseline-rubbing did not have any bearing on St. Pierre’s win, Dana White maintained it was wrong and said the cornerman involved (Phil Nurse) shouldn’t be allowed to corner another fighter again.

St. Pierre did not only come to this fight bigger and heavier (not a guarantee to a win) but he also came with a better game plan, “My strategy was that he has small shoulders, which is good for hand speed, so I went to make him carry my weight and cause his shoulders to tire,” said St. Pierre. “You’ll notice I didn’t rush him right away going for the takedown (his style in his last few matches),” he added. “The idea was to cause him to have to hop on one leg and get tired, and push off, having to carry my weight in the clinch. That was the idea in the first round…… I knew I broke him mentally after the first round.”

St. Pierre, who earned $420,000 in this fight (excluding his share for the pay-per-view earnings), could boast of being a part of one of the biggest pay-per-view draws in mixed martial arts at more than 900,000. To give you a better perspective, the December 2008 Oscar de la Hoya vs. Manny Pacquiao tiff drew 1.25 million PPVs (tied-in with the Mike Tyson vs. Razor Ruddock battle in 1991). UFC president Dana White must be ecstatic. Gate sales went as high as $4.3 million.

fedor

True to form, Andrei Arlovski looked impressive with his boxing stance while Fedor Emelianenko seemed awkwardly out of balance most of the time. Like your next-door pudgy Russian fellow, Fedor is the last person you’d think as someone with a title as awesome as World Alliance of Mixed Martial Arts champion.

Judging from the boxing-like spectacle of the first couple of minutes of the first round of Affliction: Day of Reckoning, it was obvious that Arlovski was in control of the game. He looked imposing with his height advantage while Fedor seemed vulnerable with his head well-exposed and his firsts lowered as if unsure of what to do. Whether it is his way of assessing his opponent, or it is his way of making foes grow more daring and lose all caution, the “Last Emperor” succeeded in appearing to be like someone in trouble during the first minutes of most of his matches. And it works! Remember his bouts with Kazuyuki Fujita and Kevin Randleman?

Arlovski must have bought Fedor’s “helpless” stance hook, line and sinker that he even got so cocky he made a blunder. The first couple of minutes were so good for Arlovski. His one-two combination punches saw Fedor’s head bobbing like a bouy in the sea everytime Arlovski makes a hit. He should have continued with that game plan until (who knows? Have some faith!) he lands tens of punches on that pudgy Russian head…until that pudgy Russian brain gets sore from all the shaking and bumping against that pudgy little skull of his.

But he didn’t. Poor Arlovski got overconfident and cocky he wanted to use his signature flair: the flying knee.

And one freakin punch from Fedor was all it took and it’s over.

Funny thing is: we could not help but mention that with this knockout punch, the Seth Petruzelli lucky punch that put Kimbo Slice to oblivion comes to mind.

Remember when Kimbo was getting Petruzelli cornered and the latter was trying keep Kimbo at bay with his foot with his right fist flailing while the other hand on the cage to keep his balance? And then Kimbo fell!

Fedor was cornered, Arlovski got reckless and went with his flying knee. Fedor’s overhand right seemed to have a mind of its own and found its mark. The next thing you see is Arlovski face down on the mat while Fedor confirms his being a bad-ass.

Here’s what Arlovski has to say, “I let myself down and I let my trainers down. They gave me a game plan and I don’t know why I didn’t follow the game plan and threw the flying knee.”

Thanks to his latest brush with the law, we at MMA Weekly News (and most of UFC and mixed martial arts fans) are awaiting with bated breath whether UFC will allow “The Dentist” to compete against Mac Danzig on February 7 this year at UFC Fight Night 17 in Tampa Florida.

Josh Neer was arrested and was placed behind bars for drunk driving, hit-and-run, and eluding arrest, among other traffic violations January 1 in Des Moines, Iowa.

Neer’s management company CEO Mickey Dubberly asked “everyone to reserve their judgement until all the facts are known in the court of law.” Saying that there are still a lot of unclear details on the incident, Dubberly said that they are backing Neer 100% in having the issue resolved the soonest, “and putting this matter behind us and moving forward.”

They have all the reason to get this issue done and over with ASAP because if we base it on what happened to other mixed martial arts warriors, Josh Neer would be pulled from the UFC Fight Night 17 card. MMA fighters who were arrested (except for Quinton “Rampage” Jackson) were not allowed to compete.

In an interview with the WHO-TV News (see video clip below), Neer apologized, "I just want to apologize to my friends, my family, and fans. I made some bad choices and I basically want to move on and put this behind me."

MMA Tap-out Josh Neer DUI Arrest

Whether UFC will pull him out of the February 7 card or totally end his mixed martial arts career with UFC remains an uncertainty. The UFC or Dana White has not commented about the case yet but the video clip below says UFC will determine Neer’s case within the week.

When asked about his fate, Neer said, “It’s all up to the UFC at this point. There's nothing I can really do so I just got to sit back and hopefully they'll let me fight and I'm gonna move on from this and no more troubles."

Dubberly, on the other hand, was quick to appease UFC by saying, “In no way do we ever want to bring any negativity towards the UFC as they have been nothing but great to Josh."

Let’s cross our fingers and hope for the best comes February 7, 2009.

MMA Weekly just can’t help noticing that, judging from this year’s top 10 American Pay-Per-View Rates as published by Yahoo! Sports, the young mixed martial arts industry is fast catching up with its elder brother, professional boxing’s popularity.

See for yourself:

1. Boxing: Oscar De La Hoya vs. Manny Pacquiao, Dec. 6,.

The “Dream Match” was a much talked about event where pundits cried, “Mismatch!” The fight turned out to be less than what it was expected to bed. Legendary Oscar De la Hoya came up the ring like an old stiff retiree who was hugely overwhelmed by the Pinoy Pride Manny Pacquiao from round 1. Freddie Roach was right on the money when he said the Pretty Boy doesn’t stand a chance that he could even pull the trigger against his Filipino ward. It turns out, De la Hoya came to battle leaving his pistol at home. It was a mismatch alright. De la Hoya was no match against the much smaller Mexican Destroyer.

Views: 1,250,000

2. UFC: Brock Lesnar vs. Randy Couture, Nov. 15.

It showed that the Ivan Drago vs. Rocky Balboa story is only possible in Hollywood scripts. The older battle-scar riddled Couture just didn’t make it against the much younger and bigger MMA newbie.

Views: 1,010,000

3. Wrestling: WrestleMania, Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. Paul “Big Show” Wight, March 30.

No shame here. What a man does for $20 million. Floyd Mayweather, Jr. isn’t called “Money” for nothing.

Views: 670,000

4. UFC: Georges St. Pierre vs. Jon Fitch/Lesnar vs. Heath Herring, Aug. 9.

This also earned St.-Pierre and Jon Fitch additional $60,000 each for the Fight of the Night award; Demian Maia and Rob Emerson also earned an additional $60,000 each for bagging the “Submission of the Night” award and “Knockout of the Night” award respectively.

Views: 625,000

5. UFC: Lesnar vs. Frank Mir, Feb. 2.

lesnar vs. mir

What can we say? Lesnar has been a crowd-drawer since he started with MMA.

Views: 600,000

The other top-rating shows were:

6. UFC: Quinton Jackson vs. Forrest Griffin, July 5 with 540,000 views;

7. UFC: St. Pierre vs. Matt Serra, April 19, 530,000

8. Boxing: Felix Trinidad vs. Roy Jones Jr., Jan. 19, 500,000

9. UFC: Chuck Liddell vs. Rashad Evans, Sept. 6, 480,000

10. UFC: B.J. Penn vs. Sean Sherk/Tito Ortiz vs. Lyoto Machida, May 24, 475,000

MMA Weekly says Mixed Martial Arts as a mainstream sport has finally arrived!

PACMAN

And they say boxing is dead….

Not quite.

The crew of MMA Weekly News believes boxing has to thank Manny Pacquiao and his fighting heart.  Thanks to Freddie Roach for his grudge against Oscar de la Hoya and starting this crazy idea of pitting his smaller pitbull fighter against a legend.  Thanks to Bob Arum for riding on with this "crazy idea."  And special thanks to the Golden Boy for biting into this crazy idea of a "mismatch" in favor of the lure of the Benjamins offered by PPV.  It turns out to be a real mismatch — Golden Boy was no match for the world's number one pound-for-pound boxer in the world.

They say, mixed martial arts has taken over boxing as the most scientific game on the mat.  Manny Pacquiao proved them wrong.  Boxing's number one pound-for-pound fighter displayed a spectacular level of discipline and technicality in his game plan never before seen in his earlier fights.  Pacquiao has been known as a brawler, someone who doesn't mind getting hit while he delivers his bone-crunching blows.  This was not the case with his fight with De la Hoya.

With utmost agility and cunning, he controlled the fight from start to finish–never giving in to the temptation of pouring all his blows even when De la Hoya already looked so helpless.  You can clearly see that Pacquiao, while delivering his jabs and straights and upper cuts with surgical precision, never forgets about De la Hoya's lethal left hook.  He knew that one small window, one small lapse in his defense, and the Golden Boy's left hook could change the direction of the fight.

It was mostly hit and disappear to De la Hoya's left, rendering the Golden Boy's lethal weapon useless.  De la Hoya and his high-profile handlers must have prepared for Pacquiao's 1-2-3 combos which is characteristic of his being a brawler, and they got stood up on their ambush plan.  There were no Pacquiao flurry of punches on the early rounds, just surgical precision straights to the face of De la Hoya.  The Golden Boy could barely counter as the Pacman would disappear after each hit to the right, apparently De la Hoya's blind spot.

The brawler has turned into a precision fighter.  With Manny Pacquiao, the world can start looking at boxing with a better perspective.

We could not blame anyone for thinking that boxing is losing its appeal, what with allegations of corruption and with the diluting of the term "champ' with all these alphabet titles.  Manny Pacquiao simply brought back the heart, the gritting discipline, and the nobility of the sport back into the front page.

Proponents of mixed martial arts have more reason to be glad with this development.  The death of boxing could mean the waning of the public's interest in full-contact sports.  Boxing is MMA's elder cousin.  And whatever demise boxing would suffer could conversely affect mixed martial arts.  On the other hand, keeping boxing alive speaks so much about the future of mixed martial arts as a mainstream sport.


nogueira vs. mir

When this card was first announced, most of us at MMA Weekly thought it was too good to be true. Nog and Mir, and Griffin and Evans? As if this was not enough to get us reeling, Dana White threw in the names of Quinton Jackson and Wanderlei Silva – all in a single mixed martial arts night!. We could miss Thanksgiving at our in-laws but not this!

Dana White just couldn’t help himself when he said he wanted to “stack” this card with mostly the popular UFC fighters for its traditional New Year’s Eve Weekend. Talk about stack and awe.

Let’s not get too drunk on Christmas Day and the day after that so we could have more six-packs on the 27th of December (fight date, at the MGM Grand Garden Arena or on Pay-Per-View).

THE MAIN EVENT :

UFC Light heavyweight champion Forrest Griffin (6 feet-three inches; 205 lbs.; Boxing, Muai Thai, Brazilian Jiu Jitsu; 16 wins-4 losses) vs. Rashad Evans (5’11”; 205 lbs.; Wrestling, Kickboxing; 12 wins-no losses).

Evans may rely solely on his wrestling skills on this and nothing else. Griffin may opt to stay on his feet to trade blows.

The interim Heavyweight championship bout between Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira (6’3”; 241 lbs.; BJJ, Boxing, Judo; 31 wins-4 losses) vs. Frank Mir (5’3”; 255 lbs.; BJJ, Wrestling; 11 wins – 3 losses).

Nogueira, having been an active part of mixed martial arts since 1999, is the more experienced old-timer of mixed martial arts. He has placed himself on the top ranks of the heavyweight division convincingly. Some of the MMA big names he has defeated include the likes of Heath Herring (twice), Tim Sylvia, Josh Bartnett, Mark Coleman, Mirko “Cro Cop” and Dan Henderson. His 4 losses all came from decisions. Two were with his fights with Fedor Emelianenko, today’s greatest heavyweight fighter, (which make them not difficult to swallow) and another two from split decision to Josh Barnett and Dan Henderson.

Nog and Mir are two of UFC’s top BJJ warriors who have never been submitted before. Would this New Year’s Weekend bash mark the first time one of them tap out? While we are dying to know the outcome of this fight, we actually do not expect fireworks on this one. In fact, this could actually be boring as both are just on the OK scale when it comes to fisticuffs (if they opt for a stand-up fight), but what interests us most is who would end up fighting the still-hot-from-the-oven-new-champ Brock Lesnar.

Is Dana White crossing his fingers for a Frank Mir win so that he will be assured of another blockbuster card early next year? For sure, a lot would be eager to see a repeat of a Lesnar-Mir tiff.